Forum Activity for @jimmy

jimmyk
@jimmy
03/13/15 12:53:04PM
514 posts

The Big Reverse of the Web


Off Topic

@brian - I'm of the same thinking as you. But I think the younger generation is more willing to give up their privacy for convenience. There is a whole swath of people - younger and older / not technical / trusting - who just go with the flow, clicking buttons without questioning what clicking the button means... kinda how I sign long forms from the bank.

The post is very optimistic, but realistic. Big companies what exactly what he's saying... feeding information to the masses while data mining the masses.

@derrickhand300 - bingo. Dead on.
updated by @jimmy: 03/13/15 12:54:36PM
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/10/15 10:29:05PM
514 posts

The Big Reverse of the Web


Off Topic

The Big Reverse of the Web
By Dries Buytaert

I believe that for the web to reach its full potential, it will go through a massive re-architecture and re-platforming in the next decade. The current web is "pull-based", meaning we visit websites or download mobile applications. The future of the web is "push-based", meaning the web will be coming to us. In the next 10 years, we will witness a transformation from a pull-based web to a push-based web. When this "Big Reverse" is complete, the web will disappear into the background much like our electricity or water supply. We'll forget what 'www' stood for (which was kind of dumb to begin with). These are bold statements, I understand, but let me explain you why.

In the future, content, products and services will find you, rather than you having to find them. Puma will let us know to replace our shoes and Marriott will automatically present you room options if you missed your connecting flight. Instead of visiting a website, we will proactively be notified of what is relevant and asked to take action. The dominant function of the web is to let us know what is happening or what is relevant, rather than us having to find out.

Facebook and Flipboard are early examples of what such push-based experience looks like. Facebook "pushes" a stream of personalized information designed to tell you what is happening with your friends and family; you no longer have "pull" them and ask how they are doing. Flipboard changes how we consume content by aggregating the best of the web and filtering it based on our interests; it "pushes" the relevant and interesting content to you rather than you having to "pull" the news from multiple sources. Also consider the rise of notification-centric experiences; your smartphone's notification center provides you with a stream of relevant information that is pushed to you. More recently, these notifications have become interactive; you can check in for a flight without having to open your travel app. You can buy a product without having to visit their website.

What people really want is to tune into information rather than having to work to get information. It saves them time and effort and in the long run, an improved user experience always wins. In most cases, "Show me what I want" is more useful than "Let me search around and see what I can find".

With some imagination, it's not too hard to picture how these kind of experiences could expand to other areas of the web. The way the e-commerce works today is really no different than having to visit a lot of separate physical stores or wading through hundreds of products in a department store. We shouldn't have to work so hard to find what we want. In a push-based world, we would sit back as if we were watching a fashion show -- the clothing presented could come for hundreds of different online brands but the stream is "personalized" to our needs, budget, sizes and style preferences. When the Big Reverse is complete, it will be the end of department stores and malls. Keep an eye on personalized clothing services like Trunk Club or Stitch Fix.

Ten years from now we're going to look back and recognize that search-based content discovery was broken. Today the burden is put on the user to find relevant content either via directly typing in a URL or by crafting complex search queries. While pull-based experiences might not go away; push-based experiences will dominate as they will prove to be much more efficient.

Many of you won't like it (at first), but push will win over pull. Healthcare is going through a similar transformation from pull to push; instead of going to a doctor, we'll have web-enabled hardware and software that is able to self-diagnose. Wearables like activity trackers are just the start of decades of innovation and opportunity in healthcare. Helped by the web, education is also moving from pull to push. Why go to a classroom when personalized training can come to you?

We are at the beginning of a transition bridging two distinctly different types of economies. First, a "push economy" that tries to anticipate consumer demand, creates standardized or generic products in large amounts, and "pushes" them into the market via global distribution channels and marketing. Now, a "pull economy" that—rather than creating standardized products—will create highly customized products and services produced on-demand and delivered to consumers through one-on-one relationships and truly personal experiences.

This new paradigm could be a very dramatic shift that disrupts many existing business models; advertising, search engines, app stores, online and offline retailers, and much more. For middlemen like online retailers or search engines, the push-based means they risk being disintermediated as the distribution chain becomes less useful. It marks a powerful transformation that dematerializes and de-monetizes much of the current web. While this might complicate the lives of many organizations, it will undoubtedly simplify and better the lives of consumers everywhere.

http://buytaert.net/the-big-reverse-of-the-web

updated by @jimmy: 04/13/15 02:02:45AM
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/10/15 02:19:39PM
514 posts

Ad System


Suggestions

brian:
jimmyk:
I'm kind of surprised JR doesn't have one created. All my other sites (non-JR) I sell ads direct to advertisers.

We had one in JR4, but very few people actually want to do this on their own - 99% of our users go with an existing ad system that handles all this for them, so there's not been much demand.

I can say for myself that I would love to have one. I know on a couple of my sites that aren't ranked very high, I could use an alt system like Google. But since I'd only make a few cents a day I don't even bother. My sites which have a large amount of traffic, advertisers would rather place their own ads and pay me directly - this is nice because I don't have to give a chunk to a third party.

Once people start using the profile domains and get users to establish a "homebase" on a JR site the users might want some type of revenue generator for their page. Having an ad system might provide them with an ability to sell ads or insert code from a third party provider.

Obviously, you need to set priorities for what you build for JR as far as modules are concerned. I guess for most people setting up Google Ads is fine when a majority of their income isn't coming from ads on the site. For me and my sites, ads have been pure profit.

I use a forum software for 2 of my other sites, I won't mention the software maker but it begins with an "I". The current version doesn't have an ad system, it's a separate add-on from a third party developer. Ads were requested so much that they integrated it into the core of the system. I can't make any guesses to who uses JR (size of site and global rankings), but I know there are a lot of top ranked sites using the forum software mentioned above and an ad system was a top request.

updated by @jimmy: 03/10/15 02:21:49PM
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/10/15 01:12:39PM
514 posts

Ad System


Suggestions

gary.moncrieff:
For now the best solution is to use a 3rd party ad script, they all allow you too embed ads by JS, Php etc into any site.

If JR doesn't release a module for ads (hopefully they will because ads are very important to raising revenue for a site owner) I'll end up just creating my own ad module.

Most of the other scripts I work with have ad modules. I'm kind of surprised JR doesn't have one created. All my other sites (non-JR) I sell ads direct to advertisers. I stopped using Google ads a long time ago - I wasn't making any money. Selling ads directly to advertisers with a streamlined system allowing advertisers to choose a spot, amount of time, clicks, impressions, and paying has been quite profitable and pretty hands off for me (besides approving the ads).

I can sell a butt load of ads, getting people to subscribe or sell merch on my site is a lot harder. I hope what @douglas hinted to: "yet!" is sooner than later. Ads are very important... at least to me. I create sites not as a fun hobby, but to provide a good service and make a profit.
updated by @jimmy: 03/10/15 01:13:35PM
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/10/15 11:17:52AM
514 posts

Ad System


Suggestions

Ok. Thanks for the info. I would love to see an ad code module. There are a lot of sites which have automated ad code purchasing. I'd love to see a system where someone could purchase an ad spot and it gave the purchaser details on clicks, impressions, different options for ad length, etc.

Anyway, thanks for letting me know.
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/10/15 10:55:32AM
514 posts

Ad System


Suggestions

Is there an ad system for JR? I couldn't find anything in the modules listing.
updated by @jimmy: 04/23/15 03:15:09AM
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/09/15 04:43:30PM
514 posts

Best Demo Template for Development?


Design and Skin Customization

I'm going to be getting the unlimited subscription soon, so I believe PJ / MP will be included in the subscription.

Yea, sitebuilder isn't going to be for me, I'm coding most everything. I'm just basically looking for coding shortcuts that I can copy paste to save me time - why recode everything when I can grab it from a template. I based my JR4 template off of Nova which had a ton of options which I could modify. The thing I remember about PJ was events and the subscriptions pages. PJ had a nice setup for events and the subscriptions had a nice features listing page.
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/09/15 08:48:34AM
514 posts

Best Demo Template for Development?


Design and Skin Customization

I'm not looking to sell any skins. I'm looking for the skin which has the most features that I can use as a base to make my custom skin.

I haven't used sitebuilder. Maybe I should read up on how it works.

I actually use to own a copy of Pro Jam but for some reason that wasn't translated over to the new JR5. I paid the org developer of Pro Jam around $1000 to customize the JR4 Pro Jam skin, but I guess he doesn't own that anymore.
jimmyk
@jimmy
03/08/15 09:42:46PM
514 posts

Best Demo Template for Development?


Design and Skin Customization

Which is the best demo template for development? Which demo template has the most features and should be used as a basis for custom template development?

Looking at the existing demo templates, it appears the Pro Jam or Media Pro have the most features. What are the JR team members thoughts?
updated by @jimmy: 04/22/15 06:50:17PM
jimmyk
@jimmy
02/27/15 05:37:44PM
514 posts

Google will begin ranking mobile-friendly sites higher starting April 21


Off Topic

I tested the JR site when I saw the article and it passed. Mobile is important, I think this is a good move for Google.
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